Current status of mesenchymal stem cell therapy for immune/inflammatory lung disorders: Gleaning insights for possible use in COVID-19

Author:

Yen B. Linju1,Yen Men-Luh2,Wang Li-Tzu2,Liu Ko-Jiunn3,Sytwu Huey-Kang45

Affiliation:

1. Regenerative Medicine Research Group Institute of Cellular & System Medicine, National Health Research Institutes (NHRI), Zhunan, Taiwan

2. Department of Obstetrics/Gynecology National Taiwan University (NTU) Hospital & College of Medicine, NTU, Taipei, Taiwan

3. National Institute of Cancer Research, NHRI, Tainan, Taiwan

4. National Institute of Infectious Diseases & Vaccinology, NHRI, Zhunan, Taiwan

5. Department & Graduate Institute of Microbiology and Immunology National Defense Medical Center, Taipei, Taiwan

Abstract

Abstract The broad immunomodulatory properties of human mesenchymal stem cells (MSCs) have allowed for wide application in regenerative medicine as well as immune/inflammatory diseases, including unmatched allogeneic use. The novel coronavirus disease COVID-19 has unleashed a pandemic in record time accompanied by an alarming mortality rate mainly due to pulmonary injury and acute respiratory distress syndrome. Because there are no effective preventive or curative therapies currently, MSC therapy (MSCT) has emerged as a possible candidate despite the lack of preclinical data of MSCs for COVID-19. Interestingly, MSCT preclinical data specifically on immune/inflammatory disorders of the lungs were among the earliest to be reported in 2003, with the first clinical use of MSCT for graft-vs-host disease reported in 2004. Since these first reports, preclinical data showing beneficial effects of MSC immunomodulation have accumulated substantially, and as a consequence, over a third of MSCT clinical trials now target immune/inflammatory diseases. There is much preclinical evidence for MSCT in noninfectious—including chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, asthma, and idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis—as well as infectious bacterial immune/inflammatory lung disorders, with data generally demonstrating therapeutic effects; however, for infectious viral pulmonary conditions, the preclinical evidence is more scarce with some inconsistent outcomes. In this article, we review the mechanistic evidence for clinical use of MSCs in pulmonary immune/inflammatory disorders, and survey the ongoing clinical trials—including for COVID-19—of MSCT for these diseases, with some perspectives and comment on MSCT for COVID-19.

Funder

Central Government S & T grant, Taiwan

NHRI

Taiwan Ministry of Science & Technology

National Health Research Institutes

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Cell Biology,Developmental Biology,General Medicine

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